Evidence of Ordering in Cu-Ni Alloys from Experimental Electronic Entropy Measurements
Author(s)
Allanore, Antoine; Paras, Jonathan
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Phase diagrams exhibiting extended solid-solution and lens-like melting are often reproduced using ideal solutions, where ideal mixing considers a fully random configurational entropy of mixing. In the field of irreversible thermodynamics, experimental measurements of the composition variation of high-temperature electronic transport and molten-state properties suggest however a strong role for short-range atomic ordering in these systems. Herein, measurements of the thermopower and resistivity are reported for Cu-Ni solid-solutions as a function of temperature and composition. The electronic transport properties were interpreted with an irreversible thermodynamic framework, revealing a large electronic contribution to the entropy of mixing. Through appeal to a cluster
model for the configurational entropy that uses the electronic contribution to inform the existence of ordered associates, we rationalize such contribution of the electronic entropy with the ideal entropy of mixing commonly used to model such systems. These results suggest that the short range order (S.R.O.) of the atoms plays a significant role in both the solid and molten states, even when there are no dominant intermetallic compounds in these alloys.
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and EngineeringJournal
Physical Review B
Publisher
American Physical Society
Citation
Allanore, Antoine and Paras, Jonathan. "Evidence of Ordering in Cu-Ni Alloys from Experimental Electronic Entropy Measurements." Physical Review B.
Version: Author's final manuscript
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